As the world’s attention is absolutely not riveted on the international climate change talks underway in Doha, take a look to the right (full size table after the fold) for a simple reality: the developed world has more than five times the resources going to financially-related dirty energy subsidies than it is spending in climate finance. As Oil Change International suggests, look at these figures with this question in mind:

How serious is your country, really, about fighting climate change?

This comparison between fossil-foolish subsidies ($58 billion per year) and climate-finance pledges ($11 billion/year) is rather stark.

OECD analysis shows that fossil fuel subsidies in 2011 in Annex 2 countries were more than $58 billion. Climate finance pledges over the last three years averaged $11 billion annually.

While a 5.5 to 1 ratio might seem bad enough, we should recognize that this actually seriously understates the equation since ‘externalities’ are external to the OECD analysis.

Great news, emissions down 18%. A true success story in the United States due to very low natural gas prices (and the prospects for continued low gas prices), limited government action to begin to bring ‘grandfathered’ (and grandfather) 50 year-old coal plants into the Clean Air Act, and public pressure from efforts like the Sierra Club’s Beyond Coal campaign.

However, consider the figure: 387 million tons. At the anemic Obama Administration $21 SCC, this represents a ‘hidden’ subsidy of nearly $8 billion just for the first three months of the year or, in quick estimate, a fossil foolish externality subsidy of over $35 billion. With that somewhat more reasonable $80 figure, the absence of a social cost of carbon from burning coal represents an additional $140 billion annual subsidy for fossil fuel usage in the developed countries — counting only carbon pollution only from burning coal only in the United States of America.

Apply a reasonable estimate as to the full figure by placing fossil fuels’ true subsidies outside the financial equation means that the figure to the right represents only the smallest tip of the iceberg in terms of the imbalance between developed countries’ fossil foolish subsidies and their commitment to finance climate mitigation and climate adaptation efforts in the developing world.

While we are not at the stage where the world community (outside some areas, such as the EU and California) is going to put into place a global warming impact fee (e.g., a carbon tax), openly discussing the true subsidies for fossil fuels should help the drive to eliminate the (much smaller) direct financial subsidies for fossil foolish energy usage.